SAINT
HELIER, United Kingdom — Rescuers in
Jersey on Sunday abandoned hope of finding
survivors from an explosion that flattened a three-story apartment block, with
more than a dozen people feared dead.
اضافة اعلان
At least three people were confirmed killed
in the blast early Saturday in the Channel island’s port capital St Helier,
following a suspected gas leak.
“We have three confirmed fatalities and it’s
fair to say we expect to find more,” police chief Robin Smith told a news
conference, saying that around 12 residents remained unaccounted for.
“It is with sadness that I am confirming that
the search-and-rescue operation has been moved to a recovery operation,” he
said.
The next phase will involve a “meticulous and
painstaking search of the debris” which could take weeks, Smith said.
A gas leak was the “likely” cause, he added.
“But as you often hear the police service say, we keep all our options open.”
Aided by sniffer dogs and urban rescue
experts from southern
England, Jersey emergency workers had picked through the
rubble overnight.
Fire chief Paul Brown confirmed that
firefighters were called out to investigate the smell of gas on Friday evening,
more than seven hours before the explosion.
He conceded that something had gone “horribly
wrong” given the subsequent disaster, but insisted Jersey islanders could still
have confidence in his service.
“We have been searching and we will not stop
searching for people’s loved ones,” Brown said.
Jersey’s gas supplier, Island Energy, said it
was working with the fire service to understand what happened.
Like many others in St Helier, Jersey’s Chief
Minister Kristina Moore said she was woken by the blast.
“Across the island you could hear this
extraordinary sound,” she told the BBC.
“It’s unthinkable news, we’re all absolutely
devastated and really concerned for the people who are involved, for those
whose lives have been lost.”
Officials said around 40 residents near the
destroyed flats had to be relocated on Saturday, and Moore praised the
community for rallying round.
The incident caps a tragic week for Jersey, a
British Crown dependency not part of the UK, whose economy relies on banking,
tourism, and fishing.
The coastguard Friday gave up a search for
three Jersey fishermen missing for nearly 36 hours after their wooden boat hit
a cargo ship and sank.
The freighter is owned by Condor Ferries,
whose Jersey offices lie near the destroyed apartment block.
“We must call on the collective strength of the island
community,” Moore said after the twin disasters.
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